public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from vacelts with tags "Wendy Davis" & "Terry Serpico"

August 2007

‘Army Wives’ Deal with Loneliness

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In “Only the Lonely,” Army Wives tackles the subject of loneliness. Honestly, I’m surprised that the issue has come up sooner, but thought that this episode was really a good place to explore it.

July 2007

‘Army Wives’ discover the trials of family in ‘Hail & Farewell’

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The latest episode of Army Wives is entitled “Hail & Farewell,” but the episode is all about rifts — rifts between the friendships and rifts between the families. And a game of “I’m Pissed” reveals a lot about the friends’ inner battles.

For ‘Army Wives’ and their spouses, the Army defines ‘Who We Are’

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This week on Army Wives we learn that being a part of the military — either directly or by association — is more than a career (no this isn’t a commercial), it’s a way a life. For the soldiers, the Army is their identity. And in “Who We Are” we learn that for many of the spouses, it’s the only life they’ve known.

‘Army Wives’ celebrate ‘Independence Day’

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Claudia Joy’s annual Fourth of July picnic was the center of “Independence Day,” but this episode of Army Wives was more about rite of passages than independence.

June 2007

‘Army Wives’ lose ‘One of Our Own’

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In “One of Our Own,” the fourth installment of the Lifetime hit drama Army Wives, we still do not know the fate of Denise’s (Catherine Bell) husband, the Major. However, the fate of one of the soldiers on Fort Marshall is sealed.

‘Army Wives’ learns that ‘The Art of Separation’ is hard

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he third episode of Army Wives touches on the hardest part of being part of a military family in ‘The Art of Separation.” Whoever said that absence makes the heart grows fonder obviously wasn’t a member of the military community. This installment covered not only the impact of deployment during the separation, but also the effect on family life both before and after.

‘Army Wives’ shows the messy side effects of deployment on the family in ‘After Birth’

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The second installment of Lifetime’s new hit drama Army Wives looks at the less “romantic” side of being an Army wife. In “After Birth,” we saw what happens to the twins born last week as well as the messy side effects of deployment on family life.

Sign Up with 'Army Wives' for Drama this Summer

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Being a Navy brat, I originally tuned into Lifetime’s Army Wives for the premise — family life on an Army post — and for the a cast that included Kim Delaney (NYPD Blue), Catherine Bell (JAG), and Brigid Brannagh (Angel), but I’ll be returning for the interesting characters and the captivating storyline. You can tell that the show is from the producers of Grey’s Anatomy, because it has a similar formula — ensemble cast, a sudsy plot and complicated characters drawn together by circumstances. Like Grey, the cast is both easy on the eyes and diverse – not just by race, but economical and social backgrounds.